If you lost your employment through no fault of your own you would be eligible for unemployment benefits.
Owners of companies are not eligible for unemployment benefits.
The firing can be investigated and challenged. If you are retired, then no, because you have to be continually seeking full time employment to be eligible.
Unfortunately, retiring does not qualify you for unemployment benefits. You need to have lost your job, etc., not just retire.
In order to be eligible for unemployment you need to have been released from your job at no fault of your own. Your company moving out of the state would qualify in that category and provided that you meet the other requirements you should be eligible to collect unemployment while you are actively looking for work.
If the buyout caused you to lose your job, through no fault of your own, you would be eligible for unemployment, if all other requirements were met.
No. It is beyond what a company can require a worker to do. They might fire you or you quit, but their actions would not prevent you from being eligible for unemployment benefits.
Retired service personnel are eligible for unemployment benefits if unable to find a job if they meet certain qualifications. The Related Link below gives information on that. Each state administers the program.
In general, the owners of a company, including an LLC, are not eligible to collect unemployment benefits. Unemployment insurance is typically available to employees who have lost their job through no fault of their own and who meet certain eligibility requirements. Since owners of a company are not considered employees, they do not usually qualify for these benefits.
No. Persons who are "retired" are considered to be out of the labor pool and ineligible for unemployment insurance.
Absolutely. It is called your "Retirement Pension". You cannot collect "unemployment insurance" monies if you are retired.
No. Unemployment benefits are provided for those who did work but, for some reason, have lost their jobs. If you are working, you are not eligible for unemployment benefits.
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